by jimwalton » Tue Jun 12, 2018 7:23 pm
> Except that my point is that when god lets one's actions affect another's free will, whose free will is he caring about?
Free will is free will. It has a certain dynamic of being exercised freely by each agent, sometimes complementing and sometimes conflicting against the free will of others. But it is what it is. God allows all free will. It's not that he cares more about one than another, but that he cannot stop the exercise of free will.
> Maybe what you mean is that condemning sinners is equivalent to us punishing hate speech, is that it? All I can say is that that looks incredibly human; easier to associate to human laws than to godly laws.
No, that's not what I mean. I think it's a fallacious equivalency that makes God look human. God's condemning sinners is more like a fair judge maintaining balance and order in a system, and also just reciprocity where the punishment fits the crime. The human system of justice is supposed to reflect the ideal form of it in God.
> you mentioned Noah
Right. Noah is an example of God bringing balance and order to a system that became disordered.
> How does he redeem bad choices? With our consciousness?
No, that's not how he does it, so your quick condemnation of him ("Is he aware that it's not very effective") is quite unfair. There are a hundred ways God redeems bad choices. For instance, Bishop Desmond Tutu, in South Africa, sat through the hearings of the crimes that whites committed on blacks in the name of God and the government. After two years of listening to the horrific accounts, Bishop Tutu came away with his faith strengthened. The hearings convinced him that perpetrators are morally accountable, that good and evil are real and that they matter. Despite relentless accounts of inhumanity, Tutu emerge from the hearings with this conviction: "For us who are Christians, the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ is proof positive that love is stronger than hate, that life is stronger than death, that light is stronger than darkness, that laughter and joy, and compassion and gentleness and truth, all these are so much stronger than their ghastly counterparts." The tragic shooting of grade school children in Newtown, CT, in December of 2012, also tells a story of such redemption. There was an outpouring of grief, compassion, and generosity. There were acts of selflessness, not selfishness: in the school staff who sacrificed their lives to save children, in the sympathetic response of a community and a nation. There was a deep belief that the people who died mattered, and that something of inestimable worth was snuffed out on December 14.
> But would it work?
No, not necessarily. "Can he interfere in front of us and avoid murdering?" No. If He interferes in free will, it isn't free. And you know it wouldn't just be once, but every time we turn a corner. Pursue this thought (he could interfere, and it would be fixing it) to its edges and it falls apart like a soggy cake.
> Jesus has kept a woman from being stoned by telling that 'that who is without sin, throw the first stone' or somehting like that.
He didn't keep her from being stoned by interfering in free will but by the virtue of the wisdom of what he was saying. He didn't force anything.
> Yeah, there are consequences, but which did Eve know of?
She knew perfectly well. There's no reason to think of them as ignorant, barbaric, or naive.
> And why is it discouraged that we seek wisdom on our own?
God is the center of order, and wisdom is the ability to discern order. Relationship with God is the beginning of wisdom (Job 28.28; Prov. 1.7). There's nothing wrong with wisdom, but it must be acquired in appropriate ways at appropriate times. Because of our limitations, we are not able to decide for ourselves what is in our best interests and what is not. the omniscient and omnipresent God is the only one qualified, and so we must find wisdom where it resides: in Him.
> Why is it that we're only rewarded for trusting him, but not for trying to be self-sufficient
There's nothing wrong with strength and learning, but the fact is we are NOT self-sufficient. We are too limited and vulnerable to fill the role.
> Also, this is not a 'let god fix it for ya' advice, right? Like, I won't cross the street trusting god instead of looks both sides.
Right, it's not that.
> Trust is a conclusion based on past experiences
Agreed, and faith in the Bible is always based in evidence. We are never asked to trust until we have information and evidence.
> How is that any different from a parent raising a child to be what they want it to be, instead of having its own purposes in life?
A responsible parent teaches the truth, raises the child to be wise, and let's them pursue the course that is a fit for them, following their purposes in life. This is what the Bible teaches. We are to raise children in the way they should go, to know the truth but to follow their own path. Our purposes in God are all different. God has given us different personality, gifts, interests, passions, and purposes, but a well-governed life will still point in his direction. One president of a country may be a completely different personality and strategy from another, but both are ideally supposed to be serving the people for the good of the country. That's the idea.
> Does that not include people who feel inclined to war?
God created us with hands. We have a choice whether to use our hands to help or to punch. God created us with tremendous capability to reason and create. The expectation is that we would use such things to rule and subdue the Earth, which means to be co-regents with God to run and care for the world as He would. Humans chose to go against God, and war is one of the results of that defiance and rebellion we call sin. It's not how God made us, it's what we used our free will to do.
> If god doesn't encourage the latter,
God DOES encourage the latter. It's on just about every page of the Bible. "Do what is right." "Be honest." "Be good." Love your neighbor." "Treat people justly." "Care for the poor."